LUDOVICK K MBONA v NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE 1997 TLR 26 (CA) A
Court Court of Appeal of Tanzania - Mwanza
Judge Lubuva JA
B CIVIL APPLICATION NO 1 OF 1996
6 December 1996
Flynote
Civil Practice and Procedure - Appeals - Rule 52(1) - Mandatory to serve respondent
as a necessary party - Failure to comply with Rule. C
Civil Practice and Procedure - Appeals - Rules 43 and 44 - Rules envisaging valid and
competent applications only.
-Headnote
D The applicant sought leave to appeal against an order of the High Court which
had struck out the applicants' application.for leave to appeal against an order
disallowing an award of damages. The respondent objected that the application was
incompetent, firstly, as it did not comply with the requirements of Rule 52 of the
Court's Rules and secondly that application for leave had first to be made to the High
Court.
Held: E
(1) Under Rule 52 (1) it is mandatory to serve the respondent as a
necessary party with the notice of motion two clear days before the hearing: this had
not been done and the application was therefore incompetent; F
(2) That Rules 43 and 44 of the Court Rules envisaged valid and competent
applications only: applications which were invalid or incompetent, as was the case in
the instant matter, were not proper.
Case Information
Application dismissed.
Cases referred to: G
1. Harram Singh Bhogal t/a Harram Singh & Co v Jadva Karsan [1953] 20
EACA 17
2. Leonsi Silawyo Ngalai v Justine Alfred Salakana and The Attorney
General Civil Appeal No 38 of 1996 (unreported) H
Kwikima, for the applicant.
Mtaki, for the respondent.
[zJDz]Judgment
Lubuva JA:
This is an application, by notice of motion in which the applicant, Ludovick Mbona,
is seeking leave to appeal to this Court against I
1997 TLR p27
LUBUVA JA
the order of the High Court (Mackanja, J) of 1 September 1996. A
In this application the applicant was represented by Mr Kwikima, learned counsel.
For the national Bank of Commerce, the respondent, Mr Mtaki, learned counsel
appeared. Both the learned counsel had also appeared before the High Court at
Tabora.
The matter arises from Urambo District Court Civil Case No 9 of 1994 in which the
B applicant was awarded Shs 10,000,000/= damages against the respondent. On
appeal to the High Court (Tabora D/C Civil Appeal No 16 of 1995) the award was
disallowed on 28 August 1995. From that decision, the applicant sought leave from
the High Court to appeal to this Court. In Misc Civil Application No 12 of 1995 the
C applicant's application for leave was on 1 September 1996 struck out on the ground
that it was incompetent. Hence the applicant has come to this Court seeking leave to
appeal. The application is supported by an affidavit which was deposed to by Mr
Kwikima. In sum total in that affidavit the complaint is against the D High Court
decision on the appeal and there is hardly any mention of the ruling pertaining to the
application for leave to appeal which was struck out.
Before me, when the application was called on for hearing, Mr Mtaki, learned E
counsel, took a preliminary objection that the application was incompetent because it
did not comply with the requirement of Rule 52 of the Court's rules. Mr Mtaki
further submitted that though in terms of Rule 44 of the Court's rules the High Court
has concurrent jurisdiction with this Court, it is a mandatory requirement under this
rule that application for leave must first be made to the High F Court. In the instant
matter, Mr Mtaki maintained, as the applicant's application was struck out on 28
August 1995 on account of its incompetence, there was thereafter no valid application
before the High Court. As a result, Mr Mtaki contended, there is no legal basis upon
which this application is brought to the Court of Appeal. It should be dismissed. G
Mr Kwikima, learned counsel for the applicant forcefully responded to these
submissions. In essence Mr Kwikima conceded that the respondent had not been
served with the notice of motion. However, he was quick to qualify that when the H
notice of motion was filed, service on the respondent was effected through the offices
of Mr Mtaki, learned counsel for the respondent. But such service was not accepted,
Mr Kwikima added. And yet Mr Kwikima did not have proof on this by way of an
affidavit. In spite of this, it was Mr Kwikima's contention that the application did not
I
1997 TLR p28
LUBUVA JA
A lapse as the right to appeal was a constitutional one. Furthermore, Mr Kwikima
submitted that because the High Court and the Court of Appeal have concurrent
jurisdiction in relation to applications for leave to appeal, it was his view that he
could have brought this application directly to this Court without application first
having to be made to the High Court. And so, he stressed, the fact that the B
application was struck out on grounds of incompetence should not prejudice or in any
way bar the applicant's right of appeal to the court. Finally, it was Mr Kwikima's
contention that this court being the final Court of Appeal, it should not rule out
applications such as this on grounds of technicalities as the High Court did in this
matter. C
Upon close and anxious consideration of these submissions, it is apparent that the
central issue of this application is the competence of this application having regard to
the fact that the respondent was not served with the notice of motion. As already
indicated, Mr Kwikima firmly maintains that despite the fact that the respondent D
was not served, the application did not lapse, it still stood valid. At the outset, it is
pertinent to state that it is common knowledge that this court is a creature of statute
and the applicable rules. For its functional operations the applicable E legislations
are the Constitution, the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979 and the Court's Rules of
1979. In handling its work, the Court is guided by the provisions stipulated in these
legislations and the rules. In the instant case as correctly pointed out by Mr Mtaki, the
applicable rule is Rule 52(1). Under that rule it is F mandatory to serve the
respondent as a necessary party with the notice of motion two clear days before the
hearing. This was not done and so, as submitted by Mr Mtaki the application is not
competent, it does not comply with the requirement of G the rules. It is my view
that there is merit in Mr Mtaki's submission. This is so because it is clearly provided
under rule 52(1) of the court's rules that the notice of motion among other relevant
documents shall be served on all necessary parties which in this case includes the
respondent. It is a mandatory requirement which H even Mr Kwikima does not
dispute. Mr Kwikima's argument that even though service was not affected on the
respondent, the application still remained valid and competent because the right to
appeal is a constitutional one and that the court has concurrent jurisdiction with the
High Court is, with respect, attractive but untenable. In a somewhat similar situation,
our predecessor the I
1997 TLR p29
LUBUVA JA
Court of Appeal for Eastern Africa in the case of Harnam Singh Bhogal t/a Harnam A
Singh & Co v Jadva Karsan (1) stated:
`It is well settled law that a right to appeal can only be founded on a statute
and that any party who seeks to avail himself of the right must strictly comply with
the conditions prescribed by the statute.' B
For similar reasons, it is my view that the instant case is such that it should strictly
comply with the requirements of the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979 and the Court's
rules. Unlike the situation in the case of Leonsi Silawyo Ngalai v Justine Alfred
Salakana and The Attorney-General, (2) in which we held that in election C
petition cases appeals lie to this court as a matter of right, in the present case as s 5 of
the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979 applies, leave to appeal is a necessary legal
requirement. A further requirement is that application for leave should first be made
to the High Court. With respect, Mr Kwikima's submission that he could D come up
with this application to this Court without first applying to the High Court is
misconceived. Consequently, in the circumstances of the case, I am increasingly
convinced that the mandatory provisions of Rule 52(1) not having been complied
with, the application was incompetent which in effect amounts to no application at
all. E
This ground alone is sufficient to dispose of this matter. But there is yet another
equally pertinent aspect which was raised by Mr Mtaki. I intend to deal with it
briefly. As already intimated, on 1 April 1996, in Misc Civil Application No 122 of
1995, Mackanja, J struck out the application for leave to appeal to this Court. The F
ground for that course of action was that the learned judge held the application was
incompetent on account of the fact that the affidavit in support of the application was
fatally defective. With the application for leave to appeal struck out what then is the
legal basis for this application before me. Mr Mtaki, learned G counsel was of the
view that with the application for leave to appeal struck out, there was no valid
application before the High Court and so, consequentially, the applicant cannot be
said to have complied with Rule 44. On the other hand, Mr Kwikima, learned counsel
was of a different view. In his view, Rule 44 does not H necessarily envisage only
valid applications. If I understood him correctly, it was his view that so long as he had
first filed before the High Court an application irrespective of its competence or
otherwise, it was sufficient compliance with the rule. I am settled in my view that
Rules 43 and 44 of the court's rules envisage valid and competent applica- I
1997 TLR p30
A tions only. Applications which are invalid or incompetent as was the case in the
instant case would not do.
Consequently, the application before me originating as it did from an invalid and
incompetent application before the High Court is not proper. I would venture to
think that the proper course for the applicant to take would be to file another proper
application in terms of the rules and proceed with it accordingly. B
In the event, the application is dismissed with costs.
1997 TLR p30
0 Comments
PLACE YOUR COMMENT HERE
WARNING: DO NOT USE ABUSIVE LANGUAGE BECAUSE IT IS AGAINST THE LAW.
THE COMMENTS OF OUR READERS IS NOT OUR RESPONSIBILITY.